Ethiopia’s PM Abiy Ahmed in Eritrea for landmark visit | Eritrea News

With hugs and cheers, the leaders of Ethiopia and Eritrea have met for the first time in more than 20 years amid a recent thawing in relations between the two long-time East African rivals.

In a landmark visit, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed landed in the Eritrean capital, Asmara, on Sunday, for a bilateral summit, aimed at repairing relations between the two countries. Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki warmly greeted Abiy at the airport, Eritrea‘s state television showed.

“A truly historic moment with memorable watershed events: brotherly embrace of the leaders,” saidYemane G Meskel, Eritrea’s minister of information, on Twitter, adding that Ethiopian Airlines landed in Asmara for the first time in 20 years.

The visit comes a month after Abiy surprised people by fully accepting a peace deal that ended a two-year border war between the two countries.

A UN-backed peace agreement in 2000 awarded the disputed border territories to Eritrea, but the deal was never implemented.

The countries have skirmished since then in one of Africa’s longest-running conflicts.

Last month’s decision to fully accept the deal was the biggest and most surprising reform yet announced by Ethiopia’s 42-year-old prime minister, who took office in April and quickly set off a wave of reforms, freeing journalists and opposition figures from prison, opening up the state-run economy and unblocking hundreds of websites after years of anti-government protests demanding more freedoms.

Hallelujah Lulie, programme director of Amani Africa, an Ethiopia-based African policy think-tank, believes that the shared history of the two countries is more important than the differences.

“Ethiopia and Eritrea have a very rich history, shared culture, religion and shared memory in trauma,” he told Al Jazeera in an interview from Addis Ababa.

“And the two countries have a huge potential for economic, cultural and political cooperation – that will have a great impact for the security and integration of the Horn of Africa and the bigger Eastern Africa,” Lulie added.